Food Profile: All About Nori – Edible Seaweed Paper

I am currently on a pretty strict “healthy foods only” diet to lose the baby weight (about 60 pounds total) that I put on with Tessa. Let me clarify, I see healthy eating as a lifestyle, not a diet. But since I am actively watching the pounds slip off each morning on the scale (only 38 more pounds to go!) I am being really careful about what I put in my body.

My favorite foods to eat at the moment are “superfoods” – foods with low calorie counts and high nutritional value. And right now, nori sheets are one of my daily lunch and dinner staples!

Nori is the black sheet-like food that you see wrapped around rice when you eat sushi. The answer to “What is nori?” is quite literally, “Edible seaweed paper.” C’mon. Think about it. EDIBLE PAPER. How can you NOT be interested?!?!

I, personally, get inappropriately giddy over the idea of eating something that is not normally considered edible.

The History of Nori

Anyway, nori is made from the red algae plant Porphyra yezoensi and Porphyra tenera. Nori farming takes place over 230 square miles of Japanese coastal waters, where 340,000 tons of nori is produced annually – a harvest worth over a billion dollars. (This is especially impressive, given the fact that nori usually costs around 6 cents a sheet in the United States!)

Farmers collect nori by boat, skimming the surface of the ocean where the seaweed grows attached to floating nets. The plants grow rapidly, requiring only 45 days from “seeding” until the first harvest!

Multiple harvests can be taken from a single seeding, typically at about ten day intervals. The processing of the raw product involves shredding and rack drying the seaweed, and then literally putting it through the same steps as wood pulp undergoes for papermaking. The final product is a blackish-green dried sheet approximately 7 × 8 inches.

That’s what I like about the Japanese. Western peeps are all like, “Jolly good! We have created paper and with it, we shall read and write! Good show, good show.” Easterners are all like, “Paper! Yatta! Let’s eat it! GODZILLA!!”

Before it’s mass consumption in paper form, (which was invented in Asakusa, Edo – contemporary Tokyo – in the 1600s), Porphyra seaweed was originally used by forming the plant into a paste. It’s use has been dated back as far as the 8th century, where it was used as a form of taxation in the Taiho Code of 701.

Japanese history is littered with accounts of nori as a diet staple. Common folk have been described as drying nori in the Hitachi Province Fudoki (721–721), and there are accounts of nori being harvested in Izumo Province Fudoki (713–733), showing that nori was used as food from ancient times. In Utsubo Monogatari, written around 987, nori was recognized as a common food.

While nori in paper form has been used since the 1600’s in Japan, it did not come to the United States as a regular grocery till the 1960s. Wikipedia blames this on the influence of the macrobiotic movement of the 60’s – a diet fad that involved a bunch of hippies avoiding the use of highly processed or refined foods and most animal products. Others blame the mass import of nori sheets on the rapid increase of sushi bars in the United States in the 70s. Either way, nori sheets are here in the US now, and they’re (hopefully) here to stay.

Health Benefits of Nori

Seaweed and marine algae have more concentrated nutrition than vegetables grown on land and they have long been considered food sources to prolong life, prevent disease, and impart beauty and health – and nori is considered one of the healthiest plant foods in the sea.

Here are a few of the health benefits of nori:

Nori is protein rich. One of the richest marine floras in protein, protein makes up to 50 percent of the plant’s dry weight. This makes it a popular food for the non-animal nomming bunch.

Nori is rich in fiber. Nori is made up of roughly one-third dietary fiber. One sheet of nori has as much fiber as one cup of raw spinach, which is excellent for digestive regularity.

Tons of Omega-3s. Just one sheet of nori has the same amount of omega-3s as two whole avocados! The omega-3s in nori help promote the production of natural oils on the skin, helping to reduce acne and boost skin moisture from the inside out.

Nori contains magnesium. Magnesium helps reduce the body’s production of inflammatory compounds. The magnesium content of nori helps control inflammation in the body and can help manage the frequency of migraine headaches in some people.

Nori is packed with antioxidants. Nori contains vitamin C, a potent antioxidant and high levels of B12, which is crucial for cognitive function. It also contains the compound taurine, which helps control cholesterol.

An excellent source of bioactive peptides. A 2011 study published in the American Chemical Society’s Journal of Agricultural and Food Chemistry reviewed 100 studies on the health benefits of nori and reported that the proteins in seaweed serve as better sources of bioactive peptides than those found in milk products. These reduce blood pressure, and boost heart health.

Lots of Vitamin K. Dried nori is rich in vitamin K, according to the U.S. Department of Agriculture Nutrient Database. Vitamin K in your bloodstream helps your blood clot when needed, gives protection against osteoporosis and prevents cell damage by fighting against free radicals created from the breakdown of food.

Nori contain phlorotannins. A study conducted in Pukyong National University in the Republic of Korea explained the health benefits of phlorotannins, a bioactive derivative found in edible seaweed. Phlorotannins has been linked to being an antioxidant, anticancer, antidiabetic, anti-human immunodeficiency virus, antihypertensive, and antiallergic.

Nori is packed with nutrients! Nori also contains high proportions of iodine, vitamins A and B, iron and many other nutrients, minerals and beneficial chemicals. A study conducted at Universidad Complutense In Madrid Spain, did a review of the nutritional and physiological properties of edible seaweeds and concluded that consuming nori can have antimutagenic and anticoagulant effects, strong antitumor activity, and even plays a vital role in the modification of lipid metabolism in our body.

Nori is a true superfood in that it packs a whole lotta nutrient punch in just a teeny tiny amount. A basic “serving” or nori is set at one to two sheets, but you can certainly have as many as your appetite allows.. Ten sheets of Nori come up to a measly 22 calories!

I usually make Japanese hand rolls with my nori, but when I’m lazy I’ll just wrap up a piece of crab or salmon, dollop it with wasabi and then roll it up in a nori sheet. But nori is also good crumbled into salads, as a topping for soups, as a seasoning, or – one of my favorites – as a covering for onigiri. Check out my recipe for Traditional Japanese Onigiri and Japanese Style Sesame and Furikake Pumpkin Seeds, both using nori as a primary ingredient. It’s also great as an ingredient for beauty products, but that’s another post for another day!

Gingi is a photographer, cosplayer, amateur chef, crazy cat lady, anime otaku, bookworm, generic geek, world traveler, conservative Christian, homeschooler, devoted military wife and stay at home new mother of two little girls.

Gingi blogs about anything and everything that is relevant to being a supermom, stay at home wife, homeschooler and geek girl! You can contact her at gingifreeman@gmail.com or via the contact form on her website at www.domesticgeekgirl.com

Gingi Freeman

Gingi is a photographer, cosplayer, amateur chef, crazy cat lady, anime otaku, bookworm, generic geek, world traveler, conservative Christian, homeschooler, devoted military wife and stay at home new mother of two little girls.
Gingi blogs about anything and everything that is relevant to being a supermom, stay at home wife, homeschooler and geek girl! You can contact her at gingifreeman@gmail.com or via the contact form on her website at www.domesticgeekgirl.com

15 thoughts on “Food Profile: All About Nori – Edible Seaweed Paper”

This is great! I’ve been eating it for a little while now, since I saw it at Wegmans and thought it would be a healthy, tasty snack. And I was right! I usually buy the flavored sheets. Either sea salt or sesame flavored. So good! I just eat them like that.

w000t Go SEAWEED! My favorite way to eat it is roasted with sea salt and rice^^ In Korean it’s called “gim” and there are sooo many ways to eat it! If healthy lifestyle is what you’re looking for Asian food is where it is at!

Here comes Ms Doom and Gloom mom…but is the product that is grown and harvested in the waters off Japan even safe now, with the Fukushima radiation dangers? I started looking up info, but the schools of thought are pretty much 50/50 with people saying yes to danger and no, not a problem. Just makes me wary.

I did some research on it (brief, not a lot) and it looks like it should generally be safe, but if you are concerned, there are two major brands found in the USA that harvest their nori from China, not Japan – Sunfood and Great Eastern Sun. To be safe than sorry, it might be worth buying that brand for awhile…